Description

Series

Jeremy F. Lane’s Jazz and Machine-Age Imperialism is a bold challenge to the existing homogenous picture of the reception of American jazz in world-war era France. Lane’s book closely examines the reception of jazz among French-speaking intellectuals between 1918 and 1945 and is the first study to consider the relationships, sometimes symbiotic, sometimes antagonistic, between early white French jazz critics and those French-speaking intellectuals of color whose first encounters with the music in those years played a catalytic role in their emerging black or Creole consciousness. Jazz’s first arrival in France in 1918 coincided with a series of profound shocks to received notions of French national identity and cultural and moral superiority. These shocks, characteristic of the era of machine-age imperialism, had been provoked by the first total mechanized war, the accelerated introduction of Taylorist and Fordist production techniques into European factories, and the more frequent encounters with primitive “Others” in the imperial metropolis engendered by interwar imperialism. Through close readings of the work of early white French jazz critics, alongside the essays and poems of intellectuals of color such as the Nardal sisters, Léon-Gontran Damas, Léopold Sédar Senghor, and René Ménil, Jazz and Machine-Age Imperialism highlights the ways in which the French reception of jazz was bound up with a series of urgent contemporary debates about primitivism, imperialism, anti-imperialism, black and Creole consciousness, and the effects of American machine-age technologies on the minds and bodies of French citizens.

“Jazz and Machine-Age Imperialism will shed light on how jazz has been analyzed in French through much of the twentieth century by engaging with the disciplines of music, literature, theory and cultural history, and will add new dimensions to our readings of how francophone intellectuals including Damas, Senghor and Fanon grappled with popular culture even in their political texts.” —Jennifer Boittin, Pennsylvania State University

Jeremy F. Lane is Associate Professor in the Department of French and Francophone Studies, The University of Nottingham, UK.

Praise / Awards

"This is an extremely helpful lens through which to refract what French-speaking intellectuals – even those who didn’t consider themselves French – had to say about jazz, which indeed was as disruptive as the social and economic changes that accompanied its arrival." --Twentieth-Century Music